Poncho Laloulu Revealed The Personal Drive Behind Oregons Title Push

As he gears up for another season with the Oregon Ducks, center Iapani 'Poncho' Laloulu reveals the poignant personal experiences that drive his relentless pursuit of excellence on and off the field.

For Oregon center Iapani “Poncho” Laloulu, the motivation runs deeper than football. The veteran lineman, set to return to Eugene for the 2026 season, has become one of the Ducks’ most important voices up front after helping anchor three rebuilt offensive lines during his time in the program. But the force behind that leadership, as Laloulu explained in an interview with analyst Yogi Roth and the Joe Moore Award, comes from a personal history shaped by loss, family, and a desire to represent where he came from.

Laloulu opened up about the death of his 11-month-old brother, Mai, a memory that still sits with him and pushes him through the hardest parts of his day. He described how that loss stays in the back of his mind when workouts get brutal or practice starts to unravel.

"I guess I just think, like, when times get hard, like in the workouts when the field starts to get all hectic and when things start to get tough, I just... there's something in the back of my head just remember, you know, there's people out there in heaven just looking down at you just smiling and day to day I don't want to let them down. It's probably the biggest thing and I'm just driven every single day because I want to be the light for everyone," Laloulu said to Roth about how he honors his late brother.

That same sense of purpose also ties back to Honolulu, where Laloulu grew up in the projects and learned early that his path could stretch far beyond home. He said he wants kids from Hawaii to understand that "there are much more bigger things than Hawaii."

"Hawaii will always be home. It will always be there," Laloulu said before stating that pushing himself and others to go outside of their home to accomplish big dreams with the love of their region never fading.

His leadership in Eugene didn’t arrive all at once. Laloulu said he originally didn’t want the responsibility of snapping the ball, but that changed when he stepped in for now Las Vegas Raider Jackson Powers-Johnson in the 2023 Fiesta Bowl against Liberty. From there, he kept building his voice and his role in the trenches, and by the time Oregon played Oregon State in Corvallis during the 2024 season, the move from guard back to center made it clear he was the Ducks’ path forward.

Laloulu also pointed to the people around him as part of that growth, crediting coach Dan Lanning, offensive line coach A'lique Terry, and former teammates for helping shape him into the player and person he is now. That humility shows up everywhere he talks, whether he’s speaking to reporters, explaining his approach to teammates, or appearing in a video feature with Oregon. He consistently comes back to gratitude, faith, and the idea that being part of a top program comes with a responsibility to serve.

That mindset is also why he came back. Laloulu made it clear he feels his work at Oregon is not finished, and he said the returning veterans share that same understanding of what’s ahead.

"Yeah, we talk about it every single day," Laloulu said. "We preach it every single day.

That's, so, we got slides. We got like the Big Ten Championship, Joe Moore, and then the Natty is what we say in the o-line room.

So, we, coach Terry, just go down the line and we say Natty at the end. So, I think that's our main focus as a unit."

Now entering 2026, Laloulu stands as both a proven center and a steadying presence for an Oregon offensive line that has continued to evolve around him. He was a 2025 Rimington Award finalist and FWAA All-America first team selection, and the Ducks are counting on that progression to continue. For Laloulu, the mission is simple: keep leading, keep pushing, and keep chasing the goal that the line has been saying out loud all along.

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